KENNY DALGLISH admits he has no explanation for the club’s woeful away record.

Under three different managers the Reds – who today travel to Wolves – have registered just two Premier League victories in almost 13 months.

That contributed to the difficulties Rafael Benitez had before his departure in June and was a major factor in Roy Hodgson leaving after just six months.

Dalglish could not halt the slide with an inauspicious first defeat at Blackpool nine days ago, and so goes to Molineux still trying to work out why his team have been so bad on the road.

“It’s surprising. The reasons why have yet to be fathomed,” he said.

“But it’s up to us. It’s up to the players to come together and try to turn it around as quickly as we can.

“It’s very unlike Liverpool not to have a good away record. Normally it’s

excellent. There are some things we’ve got to put right and that’s one of them.”

Another issue to put right is avenging the defeat by Wolves at Anfield last month – one of the worst performances by Liverpool in a long time.

It was the result which signalled the beginning of the end of Hodgson’s short spell in charge and hastened the return of Dalglish to a role he had not occupied for almost 20 years.

The same players who looked so lethargic in that Wolves defeat have responded positively to Dalglish’s arrival in the dugout, even if that has not been reflected in results, with a draw in Sunday’s Merseyside derby ending a run of two successive defeats.

Dalglish does not see revenge as the primary motivating factor for his players today against a club second-bottom of the table, but only five points below the 13th-placed Reds.

“I suppose it could be but you’d need to ask them that – I can’t speak for every one of them,” he said.

“Different things drive different people, but winning games is the greatest feeling in the world, that’s the biggest drive.

“Wolves played very well against us at Anfield and if some people were disappointed with that result and that’s what inspires them, then fine.

“But no matter what happened at Anfield we’d still want to go to Molineux and win the game – wherever you get the inspiration from is down to the individual.”

On getting his first win the 59-year-old Scot added: “Even if we get battered and win 1-0 it wouldn’t matter – it’d still be a great lift for everyone.

“If the players keep doing what they’ve been doing, a victory can’t be far away.

“I thought it might have come at Manchester United, at Blackpool, against Everton but we’ve been very encouraged by what the players have done.”